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Great value engine modsThought it would be useful if people posted all the non expensive mods or mods that provide most bang for your buck in one thread that could be stickied maybe? Anything that people recommend? Maybe things like drilling holes in your airbox, cold air intakes, ignition advancing, adjusting the Air Flow Meter clock spring.
Re: Great value engine modsIgnition timing, this moves the torque curve to a more useable spot rather than increasing power, but worth the 5 mins it takes,
NGK ignition wires (the blue ones), Remove the aircon stuff + all the trash stored in the boot/glovebox + spare wheel (replace with a can of foam), tighten your accelerator cable (gives better response in most cases), make sure your brake pads aren't rubbing.
![]() Re: Great value engine modsGet up 30 minutes earlier every morning and go for a run, when you get back eat some porridge and make yourself a healthy lunch to take to work. The weight you loose will have a fantastic result on performance
![]() To be fair from all my research your best bet is to shed a few kilo here and there, not much else to be got from the engine ![]() The best way forward is sideways
Re: Great value engine modsTurbo it
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![]() Re: Great value engine modsSo does anybody lean out the mixture by messing with the air flow meter?
Re: Great value engine modsits possible apparently, either replace it with the larger airflow meter from an RX7/626 or tighten the spring in your current one.
![]() Re: Great value engine modsWould you use an emissions tester to see when your at the right stochiometric ratio or is it guesswork?
Re: Great value engine mods
Oh I always use guesswork ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() (reminder to google "stochiometric ratio") john
![]() Re: Great value engine modsYep, you could test at a garage, I'd buy a gauge though and hook it up to the O2 sensor
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![]() Re: Great value engine modsTip, dont mess around with mixtures unless you fully understand why you need to and what (if any) gains you will achieve.
Realistically you have 2 options. 1, fit a bigger later type engine or 2, Turbo/Supercharge it. The perfection of a Car's beauty is that nothing should be there for beauty's sake.
![]() Re: Great value engine modscurrently considering buying a second hand 1.8 engine with a view to re-building it and fitting it in place of my 1.6.
has anyone done this here cause ive loads of questions to determine if its viable. car is a 2001 nb 1.6 is it realisticly posible to bore out a 1.8 to a higher cc with the view to gaining more n/a power. will i need to change my gear box, if so will the 1.8 gearbox fit directly in place of my existing one. i presume i will need the ecu, but will i need the complete engine loom. like most mx5 drivers im after reliability so the power thing isnt that important, but if it was easilly attained it would be a nice bonus. any info on this is greatly appreciated. You som'bitches couldn't close an umbrella
Re: Great value engine modsThe 1.6 and 1.8 gearboxes are the same. I'd add a 1.8 diff though instead.
Heres where I'd start for details on the conversion : http://www.flyinmiata.com/tech/1.8_conversion.php
![]() Re: Great value engine modsdoes anyone know anything about ITBs ? would it be worth the hassle
94 Eunos roadster 1.8
Re: Great value engine mods
Not if you want alot of power. But it woud be mad ![]() http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EmHSFWfjwbg
![]() Re: Great value engine modsa friend of mine got a set of ITBs of a levin to fit a peugeot 106, if i could pick up a cheap one from a scrapyard id have a go at making the adapter like he did to make them fit
94 Eunos roadster 1.8
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